Example sentences of "that [verb] for [art] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | The model being erected was that made for the Olympia Aero Show in 1929 . |
2 | It was invented by the Joseph-Robinson corporation , a particularly unscrupulous food company that operated for a time amongst the outer colonies of the planet Earth . ’ |
3 | And both these books pale before novels that contend for the mantle of Disraeli : those of Jeffrey Archer himself . |
4 | This record features lowdown bass that goes for the backs of your legs and up a bit . |
5 | Businesses that qualify for the relief include those of market makers on The Stock Exchange , but no other businesses dealing in securities , stocks or shares . |
6 | During night missions inside Iraq , the laser shines from the belly of the bomber , and is kept on target by the pilot or the weapons officer , with the help of electronics that compensate for the aircraft 's movements . |
7 | ‘ Roads , park , dispensary , institute , and so on — a hundred and twenty thousand pounds ; repairs and upkeep , recurring , four thousand … ’ and so on through all the elements that make for the running of a town , ending with the caution that it was ‘ all very round-figurey . ’ |
8 | The different playing philosophies that account for the North-South divide are emphasised by the views of two of the most successful coaches or recent times — Australia 's Bob Dwyer and Ian McGeechan of Scotland and the British Lions . |
9 | This meant that to go for a crap you had to take a shovel and dig a hole which was hard work when the ground was solid . |
10 | And we 've allowed for the fact that cooking for a family or organising a dinner party may take you away from the cooker when you want the food to go on cooking . |
11 | Corporatism thus implies an ‘ institutional fusion ’ , whereby organizations that developed for the representation of interests become instruments of state intervention ( Jessop 1979 ) . |
12 | Duncan asked , now sprawled on the bed , his legs crossed and his head resting against a thin cushion that passed for a pillow . |
13 | He had pulled the band of material that passed for a skirt up around her waist and was tugging at the top of her tights . |
14 | She strode out of the cupboard that passed for the shuttle 's sick bay and into the cabin . |
15 | They found that allowing for the tax timing option ( as well as stochastic interest rates and different income and capital gains tax rates ) in the no-arbitrage condition resulted in the no-arbitrage prices of the S&P500 moving much closer to the actual prices for the period June 1982 to September 1982 than if no such adjustments were made to the no-arbitrage condition . |
16 | ‘ So , perhaps a really cynical person would conjecture that you need the money that caddying for a golfer like Harley , who is obviously back in form and on the verge of some big wins and big money , would bring . |
17 | So the choreographer can not make strong contrasts between the style usually used for the other-worldly spirits and that used for the characters living in the particular setting . |
18 | By the summer , the same show had been enlarged and retitled Jolly Jack or The Heart that Beats for a Sailor . |
19 | But you and I both know that applying for a stay of more than six months takes time . |
20 | As well as all the programs that appear in the above publications , what you may also do is use the programs that appear for the Singer System machine version of the Form Computer , called the Knitting Computer or Digiform Computer . |
21 | On the wall that passes for a kitchen , Gertrude Stein and Alice B. Toklas stare down in fastidious disapproval at Anya 's batterie de cuisine , unfit for whipping up their favourite hashish fudge . |
22 | Rosenne concluded that the inclusion of jus cogens , along with the distinction that is drawn between treaties that are void ab initio165 and those that can be subsequently avoided , gives the Convention the flexibility that allows for a reconciliation between its dominant bilateralism and the overall community interest . |
23 | And we lack provisions that allows for a presidency in the absence of a minister is a good one as long as it is monitored closely by district council . |
24 | It is an attitude that allows for the acceptance of continual change and advancement . |
25 | A form of strict liability may be created by wording that allows for the practicability of precautions . |
26 | ‘ I 'd have thought that looking for a gas leak with a lighted match would be the last thing he would do . ’ |
27 | Somebody said in the paper shop that looking for the papers er I thought , I could n't see any , I was starting to walk out I said have you finished with the papers , said no there they are in that cabinet |
28 | With better information , the chemical worker would ask for a wage that compensated for the danger of illness but would still neglect the marginal cost that illness would impose on society through expensive health care , which uses society 's resources but may be free to the individual . |
29 | It can be judged from these that plans for the subscription were fairly advanced before her death . |
30 | The Royal Society of Nature Conservation ( RSNC ) has predicted that plans for the restructuring of local government will have a detrimental effect on Britain 's wildlife . |